My favorite Ruby thing this week: when *my_array
This week we added a feature where our texting club customers can define their own aliases for the JOIN keyword, so they can track and measure which advertising is attracting people to JOIN. (For example a receipt might say “Text JOIN to…” while a sign in a bus might say “Text SNOWBUNNY to ….”)
In Ruby, the basic use of case / when is something like:
case keyword
when "KEYWORD1"
# do something
when "KEYWORD2"
# do something else
end
In this case, the when needs to evaluate run-time data, not compile-time data. In Ruby it is trivially simply to implement run-time comparison arguments for a case – when statement by using an array name as the argument to the when clause.
The solution with Ruby is trivially simple: use when *array_name
join_aliases = ("JOIN " + myaccount.join_aliases.to_s).split(" ")
# sets join_aliases = ["JOIN", "SNOWBUNNY", "SNOW"]
case keyword
when *join_aliases
# do JOIN stuff